The market’s doing it again–forgetting that earnings don’t matter with immature biotech stocks such as Nektar
Rebuying Nektar Therapeutics in my Volatility Portfolio–this time using options
Selling Nektar out of my Volatility Portfolio after near 40% pop today
Market moves to risk off just before start of biotech conference season, opening for short term biotech trades? Adding Nektar to my Volatility Portfolio
Today, March 6, was a day for risk off. The indexes ended up negative for the day but not by a huge amount. The Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index, for example, was down just 0.33% on the day.
Riskier indexes took a bigger hit. The NASDAQ Composite was off 0.37% and the small cap Russell 2000 was lower by 0.69%. The iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology ETF (IBB) was down 0.88%.
But if you were looking for bigger drops today, the place to cast your eyes was on individual biotech stocks, especially those that had been rallying recently. For example, Incyte (INCY) was off by 1.85%. The Medicines Company (MDCO) fell 2.28%. Ionis Pharmaceuticals (IONS) got a double dose of downward pressure from the market in general and from bad news on a drug trial and tumbled 8.26%.
This dip in biotech stocks comes at, what can I call it, a very interesting time. Especially if it continues for a day or two or three.
That’s because we’re right at the beginning of the medical conference season, which gives biotechs with any news at all a big showcase for the promising new drugs in their pipelines. The American College of Cardiology’s annual conference runs from March 13 to 15 in Washington, D.C.. The annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research begins on April 1 and extends to April 5, also in Washington. The American Academy of Neurology meets from April 22 to April 28 in Boston.
How big a showcase can one of these conferences be for a biotech company?
Here’s the opportunity for Incyte at the American Association for Cancer Research meeting, according to the Bioinvest’s Medical Technology Stock Letter (Bioinvest.com.) Incyte will present 20 abstracts from its R&D portfolio at the conference including a clinical presentation of the dose-escalation phase of the ongoing trial of its FGFR 1/2/3 inhibitor, and preclinical data from inhibitor programs targeting PI3Kd, LSDa, JAK1, BRD/BET and IFFR4, as well as from its epacadostat and immuno-oncology programs.
Whew!
Companies don’t go to these conferences to announce bad news and failing tests. So these meetings can provide a big dose of market-moving good news.
Besides Incyte, other biotechs that look to be in a position to get a boost from these annual meetings include Acadia Pharmaceuticals (ACAD) and Ionis from the American Academy of Neurology meeting; and Nektar Therapeutics (NKTR) at the American Association for Cancer Research Meeting.
Trying to figure out where you might get the most conference bang for your buck can get pretty complicated. Incyte is likely to make the biggest splash during meeting season but the stock has run up strongly so it doesn’t necessarily offer the biggest potential pop. At the March 6 close at $134.38 the shares are less than $10 below my target price of $142. Acadia is promising since it has pulled back lately. I think my target price of $42 set back in November now lags the progress at the company so as of this post I’m raising my target to $55, which gives the stock almost $20 a share to run higher from the March 6 close at $36.79. Nektar Therapeutics might offer the most upside from a good conference season since the stock has been hurt by some disappointing research results and the conferences offer a big chance to recoup. The company is also at work in a currently hot area where its new painkiller, an opiod with less likelihood to produce addiction, addresses the current national opiod epidemic. (The drug would be the first novel opiod molecule in decades.) The current trial of that molecule has a fairly high chance of disappointment, which could take the stock down 30% or so. But the company is also presenting five data abstracts at the American Association for Cancer Research meeting from its immune-oncology pipeline. Nektar is definitely the high risk/high reward pick from the group. I’d say the target price is $28 with the downside to $10. The stock closed at $14.38 on March 6.
If you’re looking for leverage, all of these stocks offer options and all except for Nektar offer long-term LEAPS options. The problem is that the implied volatility, and thus the cost of these options, is relatively high. The implied volatility on Incyte’s January 19, 2018 call option with a strike at $140 is 45.89%. That means you’re paying a lot for the option since demand from other traders for this call, just 5% above the recent price, is very heavy. That heavy premium is present pretty much everywhere I’ve looked. Acadia’s January 19, 2018 call at $45 comes with implied volatility of 52.48%. The implied volatility of The Medicines Company’s January 19, 2018 call with a strike at $70 is 61.98%.
That’s just a fact of life for volatile biotech’s, however. According to IVolatility.com the LOW implied volatility for a 180-day call option on Inctye is 39% (back on February 23, 2017). That’s the kind of implied volatility you get at the high for implied volatility in other sectors. The HIGH implied volatility for Inctye is 62.99% on April 11, 2016. To take another example, the implied volatility for a 180-day call on Acadia ranges from a low of 55.3 to a high of 76.86. (For future reference, the high implied volatility according to the historical data tends to come in March and April and the low implied volatility occurs in October and November. Makes me wonder if there’s not an options play on this seasonal pattern with a buy in October and a sell in April on the rise in implied volatility.)
Considering all these alternatives–and the fact that I already own Incyte, Ionis, and Acadia in my Jubak Picks portfolio–as of tomorrow I’m going to add Nektar Therapeutics as a volatility play on meeting season to, what else, my new Volatility Portfolio.